top | item 45965700

(no title)

majani | 3 months ago

Now that network effects and data lock-in have taken root, downtime is not as big of a concern as it was in the 2000s

discuss

order

amw-zero|3 months ago

What does this even mean? Because people have locked in their data, they’re ok with downtime? I can’t imagine a world where this is true.

Ambolia|3 months ago

It costs a lot of money to move, you don't know if the alternative will be any better, and if it affects a lot of companies then it's nobody's fault. "Nobody ever got fired for buying Cloudflare/AWS" as they say.

wahnfrieden|3 months ago

It's just that customers are more understanding when they see their Netflix not working either otherwise they just think you're less professional. Try talking to customers after an outage and you will see.

serf|3 months ago

it's not just that, it's the creation of a sorta status symbol, or at least of symbol of normality.

there was a point (maybe still) where not having a netflix subscription was seen as 'strange'.

if that's the case in your social circles -- and these kind of social things bother you -- you're not going to cancel the subscription due to bad service until it becomes a socially accepted norm.

swyx|3 months ago

except, yknow, where peoples lives and livelihoods depend on access to information/being able to do things on exact time. aws and cloudflare are disqualifying themselves from hospitals and military and whatnot.

kordlessagain|3 months ago

For example, Cloudflare employees make money on promises to mitigate such attacks, but then can’t guarantee they will, and take all their customers down at once. It’s a shared pain model.